September 2012
Issue No. Twenty

 

Submarine Reunions

 

reunion  

  

 

   

USS Nautilus (SSN 571)

 

September 27-30, 2012 

Groton, CT

Contact: Robert Childs

Phone: 864-384-6105 

 Email: robertdchilds@gmail.com

  

 

 

 

Become a Permanent Part of the Museum!

 

Currently The Submarine Force Museum and USS Nautilus is creating a commemorative PERMANENT PAVER WALKWAY at the Museum. You can now honor the memory of a special person(s). This enduring legacy is a wonderful way to memorialize a loved one or honor someone special with a meaningful gift.  

 

  brick

 

 

Thank you to all that have purchased a brick paver in honor or memory of a special person(s). We continue to grow our paver one brick at a time.

  

 For details on becoming a permanent part of  the greatest Submarine Museum ever and the benefits included please click here.  

(Bricks are special ordered and are batched for efficiency. Please allow 10 - 12 weeks for delivery of replica bricks. We appreciate your patience.) 

 

 

 Check out this Cool Video! 

USS Nautilus General Dynamics - Part 1
USS Nautilus General Dynamics -
Part 1

 

 


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Ahoy Shipmates! 

 

 

Summer has flown by, kids are back in school, and traffic at the museum has started to slow down as we prepare to go into the fall season.  I must say, this summer turned out considerably better than last year when we were visited by tropical storm Irene the last week in August.  

 

Attendance at the museum this year in July and August (our two busiest months of the year) was up about 12 percent over last year; not too surprising since the last week of August was wrecked last year by the tropical storm.  Still, surprising or not we are glad to see the attendance up.  Our last kids activity of the year, a self-guided scavenger hunt over Labor Day weekend was enjoyed by several hundred children.

 

We are continuing our permanent brick paver program; the first large batch of bricks are being engraved and are planned to be installed in September, hopefully prior to the Nautilus Alumni Association Reunion which starts on September 30. 

 

Again, to remind everybody, there currently is no planned deadline; this is a program that we will continue as long as there continues to be interest in participation or until the entire entry area to the museum is filled with engraved bricks, whichever comes first. So please help us by continuing to pass the word. 

 

Please drop by the museum and check us out, you won't be disappointed.

 

  

Sincerely,

 

Mike Riegel

Executive Director

Submarine Force Library and Museum Association  

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USS NAUTILUS 

 

ussnautilis   

 

Construction of NAUTILUS was made possible by the successful development of a nuclear propulsion plant by a group of scientists and engineers at the Naval Reactors Branch of the Atomic Energy Commission, under the leadership of Captain Hyman G. Rickover, USN.

 

In July of 1951, Congress authorized construction of the world's first nuclear powered submarine. On December 12th of that year, the Navy Department announced that she would be the sixth ship of the fleet to bear the name NAUTILUS. Her keel was laid by President Harry S. Truman at the Electric Boat Shipyard in Groton, Connecticut on June 14, 1952.

 

After nearly 18 months of construction, NAUTILUS was launched on January 21, 1954 with First Lady Mamie Eisenhower breaking the traditional bottle of champagne across NAUTILUS' bow as she slid down the ways into the Thames River. Eight months later, on September 30, 1954, NAUTILUS became the first commissioned nuclear powered ship in the United States Navy.

 

On the morning of January 17, 1955, at 11 am EST, NAUTILUS' first Commanding Officer, Commander Eugene P. Wilkinson, ordered all lines cast off and signaled the memorable and historic message, "Underway On Nuclear Power." Over the next several years, NAUTILUS shattered all submerged speed and distance records.

 

On JulCDR Andersony 23, 1958, NAUTILUS departed Pearl Harbor, Hawaii under top secret orders to conduct "Operation Sunshine", the first crossing of the North Pole by a ship. At 11:15 pm on August 3, 1958, NAUTILUS' second Commanding Officer, Commander William R. Anderson, announced to his crew, "For the world, our country, and the Navy - the North Pole." With 116 men aboard, NAUTILUS had accomplished the "impossible", reaching the geographic North Pole - 90 degrees North. Read More.....

 

 

 One Crystal Lake Rd.

Groton, Ct 06340

 800.343.0079 

www.submarinemuseum.org   

 

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